MATTER OF POULIN
A-18151469
In Exclusion Proceedings
Decided by Board May 2, 1969
Interim Decision #1973
EXCLUDABLE: Act of 1952—Section 212 (a) (20) [8 U.S.C. 1182]—Immigrant, no visa.
On October 22, 1968, the special inquiry officer directed that the applicant be excluded and deported from the United States on the above-stated ground. The applicant waived his right to appeal from that decision of the special inquiry officer. However, the District Director at Portland, Maine, certified the case to this Board for review and final decision.
The record relates to a 31-year-old married male alien, a native and citizen of Canada, who was admitted to the United States for permanent residence on July 29, 1968. He then presented an immigration visa which was supported by a certification from the Secretary of Labor. That labor certification showed that the applicant was destined to the Bates Manufacturing Co., Inc., Lewiston, Maine, for employment as a “weaver learner,” at a salary of $1.65 an hour.
The applicant did work for the Bates Manufacturing Co. for one day, but then quit because he became ill. He then remained in Lewiston, Maine, for two days until he felt better. Thereafter, he returned to Canada where his wife, their child, and his parents, all natives and nationals of Canada, reside.
The applicant remained in Canada until September 10, 1968, when he applied for admission into this country as a returning resident, to take employment in the woods. At that time he pre-
The applicant testified that at the time of his original entry on July 29, 1968, he only intended to work for the Bates Manufacturing Co. until he could obtain his Alien Registration Receipt and Border Crossing Identification Card. He stated that a Canadian named Toulouse, of Lac Megnatic, P.Q., Canada, assisted him in applying for his visa, and told him that although he would obtain the labor certification for the Bates Manufacturing Co., he need not continue to work for that company after he entered the United States and obtained his I-151, and that thereafter he could go anywhere he wished. He admitted that at the time of his original entry he intended, after obtaining his I-151, to work on lumbering operations with his brother and his brother-in-law, both of whom are permanent residents of the United States.
The applicant set forth that he has been working on lumbering operations in the United States for the past 13 years. He indicated that he was previously admitted each year under bond to work in the woods, but that it has now become very difficult to obtain admission under bond for such work, and that one must obtain a visa to get regular employment in lumbering operations in the woods in Maine. It was because of these difficulties that he applied for an immigrant visa, after consulting with the Canadian named Toulouse. He conceded that at the time of his original entry into the United States he intended to work in the woods with his brothers, and that he had no wish to work for the Bates Manufacturing Co.
Summarizing briefly, the applicant obtained his visa and his original admission into the United States so that he could work in the woods with relatives. The labor certification he then presented, and on the basis of which his visa was issued, showed that he was destined to the Bates Manufacturing Co. for employment as a weaver learner. He had consulted with an individual in Canada who had advised him that he need only enter upon such employment and then could leave immediately upon receipt of his Alien Registration Receipt and Border Crossing Identification Card, with which he could then go to work anywhere he pleased. He then intended, as is the case now, to work in this country as a
Section 212 (a) (14) of the
The applicant did not have a certification covering the work he actually intended to do in the United States, to wit, lumbering operations in the woods. Therefore, he was not in possession of a valid labor certification at the time of his entry into the United States on July 29, 1968. He was, accordingly, not then eligible for the visa which he presented. Hence, he is not now a bona fide returning resident alien inasmuch as he has never procured a labor certification for the employment to which he is destined, nor has he ever procured any visa other than the one which he presented on July 29, 1968.
In conclusion, the purpose of section 212 (a) (14) of the
ORDER: It is ordered that the special inquiry officer‘s decision of October 22, 1968, directing that the applicant be excluded and deported from the United States, be and the same is hereby affirmed.
